CougTek
Hairy Aussie
News source (or rumor source
If true, AMD is capout IMO. There's a window that could allow them to increase their market share, but Q4 will be too late. Zen server processors will probably be performance-competitive with either the current Intel Xeon E5 V3 generation, or if AMD has especially well made the Zen core design, maybe with the Xeon E5 V4 (and only because their server CPUs will have more cores than Intel: 32 vs 22). But by the time Q4 2016 arrives, Intel will have a refreshed Xeon lineup either being released, or close to being released and those will almost certainly make the Zen-based server processors look bad.
It's not really surprising, given how often AMD has managed to miss opportunities since what, 2006? What's really saddening is that without competition, Intel's processors' prices will keep rising.
Meanwhile, the Intel Xeon E5 V4 should be released by mid-November, since it would make little sense to launch it later than that. Businesses generally don't make big purchases too close to the holiday break (no one's working to install the new stuff = frozen money).
If true, AMD is capout IMO. There's a window that could allow them to increase their market share, but Q4 will be too late. Zen server processors will probably be performance-competitive with either the current Intel Xeon E5 V3 generation, or if AMD has especially well made the Zen core design, maybe with the Xeon E5 V4 (and only because their server CPUs will have more cores than Intel: 32 vs 22). But by the time Q4 2016 arrives, Intel will have a refreshed Xeon lineup either being released, or close to being released and those will almost certainly make the Zen-based server processors look bad.
It's not really surprising, given how often AMD has managed to miss opportunities since what, 2006? What's really saddening is that without competition, Intel's processors' prices will keep rising.
Meanwhile, the Intel Xeon E5 V4 should be released by mid-November, since it would make little sense to launch it later than that. Businesses generally don't make big purchases too close to the holiday break (no one's working to install the new stuff = frozen money).